R43GM144027
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Heals?: An Active Hydrogen Sulfide Delivery Technique for Accelerated, Effective Wound Healing - Project Summary/Abstract
The proposed effort addresses the need for novel therapeutic tools that improve chronic wound healing outcome. Recent studies show that patients with diabetic foot ulcers have a 40% recurrence rate within 1 year after treatment and healing, nearly 60% within 3 years, and 65% within 5 years, while the 5-year mortality rate is exceeded only by lung cancer.
Lower limb wounds in the diabetic population are generally caused by endothelial dysfunction, the leading cause of blood circulation issues such as peripheral artery disease (PAD) and microvascular disorder. Endothelial dysfunction is often missed until the symptoms become advanced enough to cause critical limb threatening ischemia (CLTI), ischemic and neuro-ischemic foot ulcers, wounds, and amputations.
In addition, therapeutic strategies for diabetic wound healing are stymied by their lack of effectiveness in addressing the challenges associated with disruption of pathways involved in the healing response. The changes in the wound environment include hyperglycemia-related perfusion deficiency, dysfunction of leukocyte function and accumulation of advanced glycation-end products and disrupted ECM.
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S), a recently discovered gasotransmitter, has been shown to promote angiogenesis-related behavior in endothelial cells through activation of pathways that include nitric oxide signaling and the canonical HIF-1 and VEGF-A-mediated angiogenesis cascade. There is significant evidence linking deficiency in endogenous H2S to endothelial dysfunction and consequently microvascular disorder and poor perfusion.
Systemic administration of (exogenous) H2S donors have been shown to markedly improve healing rate in ischemic wounds. However, systemic and widespread therapeutic delivery of H2S can lead to unintended consequences including hypotension, hepatotoxicity, and malignant angiogenesis. This leaves a significant opportunity for individualizing patient care through targeted, precision delivery of H2S.
In the proposed SBIR Phase I study, we intend to demonstrate a unique therapeutic system that transdermally detects endogenous levels of H2S while delivering an exogenous amount needed to locally maintain the H2S levels within a therapeutic window. In this collaborative effort between Exhalix and the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, we will show the feasibility and merits of this therapeutic approach for ischemic wound healing improvements over baseline conditions on small animal models.
We anticipate that the proposed feasibility study will last 12 months and success in reaching our objectives will lead to a Phase II effort for development of prototypes and demonstration on larger animals.
The proposed effort addresses the need for novel therapeutic tools that improve chronic wound healing outcome. Recent studies show that patients with diabetic foot ulcers have a 40% recurrence rate within 1 year after treatment and healing, nearly 60% within 3 years, and 65% within 5 years, while the 5-year mortality rate is exceeded only by lung cancer.
Lower limb wounds in the diabetic population are generally caused by endothelial dysfunction, the leading cause of blood circulation issues such as peripheral artery disease (PAD) and microvascular disorder. Endothelial dysfunction is often missed until the symptoms become advanced enough to cause critical limb threatening ischemia (CLTI), ischemic and neuro-ischemic foot ulcers, wounds, and amputations.
In addition, therapeutic strategies for diabetic wound healing are stymied by their lack of effectiveness in addressing the challenges associated with disruption of pathways involved in the healing response. The changes in the wound environment include hyperglycemia-related perfusion deficiency, dysfunction of leukocyte function and accumulation of advanced glycation-end products and disrupted ECM.
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S), a recently discovered gasotransmitter, has been shown to promote angiogenesis-related behavior in endothelial cells through activation of pathways that include nitric oxide signaling and the canonical HIF-1 and VEGF-A-mediated angiogenesis cascade. There is significant evidence linking deficiency in endogenous H2S to endothelial dysfunction and consequently microvascular disorder and poor perfusion.
Systemic administration of (exogenous) H2S donors have been shown to markedly improve healing rate in ischemic wounds. However, systemic and widespread therapeutic delivery of H2S can lead to unintended consequences including hypotension, hepatotoxicity, and malignant angiogenesis. This leaves a significant opportunity for individualizing patient care through targeted, precision delivery of H2S.
In the proposed SBIR Phase I study, we intend to demonstrate a unique therapeutic system that transdermally detects endogenous levels of H2S while delivering an exogenous amount needed to locally maintain the H2S levels within a therapeutic window. In this collaborative effort between Exhalix and the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, we will show the feasibility and merits of this therapeutic approach for ischemic wound healing improvements over baseline conditions on small animal models.
We anticipate that the proposed feasibility study will last 12 months and success in reaching our objectives will lead to a Phase II effort for development of prototypes and demonstration on larger animals.
Awardee
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
New Mexico
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Exhalix was awarded
Project Grant R43GM144027
worth $300,000
from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences in September 2021 with work to be completed primarily in New Mexico United States.
The grant
has a duration of 1 year and
was awarded through assistance program 93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity PHS 2020-2 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed).
SBIR Details
Research Type
SBIR Phase I
Title
HEALS™: An Active Hydrogen Sulfide Delivery Technique for Accelerated, Effective Wound Healing
Abstract
Project Summary/Abstract The proposed effort addresses the need for novel therapeutic tools that improve chronic wound healing outcome. Recent studies show that patients with diabetic foot ulcers have a 40% recurrence rate within 1 year after treatment and healing, nearly 60% within 3 years, and 65% within 5 years, while the 5-year mortality rate is exceeded only by lung cancer. Lower limb wounds in the diabetic population are generally caused by endothelial dysfunction, the leading cause of blood circulation issues such as peripheral artery disease (PAD) and microvascular disorder. Endothelial dysfunction is often missed until the symptoms become advanced enough to cause critical limb threatening ischemia (CLTI), ischemic and neuro-ischemic foot ulcers, wounds, and amputations. In addition, therapeutic strategies for diabetic wound healing are stymied by their lack of effectiveness in addressing the challenges associated with disruption of pathways involved in the healing response. The changes in the wound environment include hyperglycemia-related perfusion deficiency, dysfunction of leukocyte function and accumulation of advanced glycation-end products and disrupted ECM. Hydrogen sulfide (H2S), a recently discovered gasotransmitter, has been shown to promote angiogenesis-related behavior in endothelial cells through activation of pathways that include nitric oxide signaling and the canonical HIF-1 and VEGF-A-mediated angiogenesis cascade. There is significant evidence linking deficiency in endogenous H2S to endothelial dysfunction and consequently microvascular disorder and poor perfusion. Systemic administration of (exogenous) H2S donors have been shown to markedly improve healing rate in ischemic wounds. However, systemic and widespread therapeutic delivery of H2S can lead to unintended consequences including hypotension, hepatotoxicity, and malignant angiogenesis. This leaves a significant opportunity for individualizing patient care through targeted, precision delivery of H2S. In the proposed SBIR Phase I study, we intend to demonstrate a unique therapeutic system that transdermally detects endogenous levels of H2S while delivering an exogenous amount needed to locally maintain the H2S levels within a therapeutic window. In this collaborative effort between Exhalix and the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, we will show the feasibility and merits of this therapeutic approach for ischemic wound healing improvements over baseline conditions on small animal models. We anticipate that the proposed feasibility study will last 12 months and success in reaching our objectives will lead to a Phase II effort for development of prototypes and demonstration on larger animals.Project Narrative Lower limb chronic wounds in diabetic populations, often caused by chronic limb-threatening ischemia (CLTI), represents a significant global cause of morbidity, public health care burden, and a 5-year mortality rate exceeded only by lung cancer. Current therapeutic strategies are limited in their effectiveness to address the challenges due to diabetes-associated disruption of pathways involved in the healing response leading to changes in the wound environment including hyperglycemia-related microvascular changes. This proposal addresses the need for a novel therapeutic modality as a non-surgical treatment of CLTI that improves local vascularization and accelerates healing wounds in an aging population.
Topic Code
300
Solicitation Number
PA20-260
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 12/5/22
Period of Performance
9/20/21
Start Date
9/19/22
End Date
Funding Split
$300.0K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$300.0K
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to R43GM144027
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R43GM144027
SAI Number
R43GM144027-497345275
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Small Business
Awarding Office
75NS00 NIH NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES
Funding Office
75NS00 NIH NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES
Awardee UEI
C1NVZ5M6E319
Awardee CAGE
6VB21
Performance District
01
Senators
Martin Heinrich
Ben Luján
Ben Luján
Representative
Melanie Stansbury
Modified: 12/5/22